“undecided” about the “anyone”

Tweedpoll.jpg
Thomas Nast cartoon, featuring Boss Tweed ( referencing the 1876 disputed election)


The caption:
Boss. “You have the liberty of Voting for any one you please; but we have
the Liberty of Counting in any one we please.”
“Do your Duty as Citizens, and leave the rest to take its course.” – New York Times.

My overwhelmed friends in Washington, Wisconsin, Michigan, Florida, Pennsylvania and elsewhere will find it difficult to believe, but I’ve barely seen a single political campaign ad, TV or print, all year long. (I’m not complaining, of course, especially since no real information is ever conveyed by this stuff.)
Yeah, so I don’t even watch TV (except Jon Stewart and SNL) and somehow I’ve always been able to turn a blind eye to print advertising of any kind (except for those which include particularly sexy men). Actually however my relative isolation from the campaign (it’s always war metaphors in America) has more to do with the perverse wonders of the Electoral College and the fact that everyone long ago agreed that New York belongs to the Democrats.
So where do I leave my teeny tiny vote for president tomorrow? Not for the Republican candidate of course, but I’m also not going to check the Democratic column. As I’ve said often before, both clubs are Rightwing parties and while only one of the two standard-bearers has a mind, he’s used it to argue, among other things, that the Iraq war must be expanded, that Americans can’t have single-payer universal health care, that he might nominate anti-choice candidates for federal courts, that the WTO is a good thing, that lesbians and gays should not be permitted to marry and that we need the Patriot Act.
But do I have an alternative? Like most of the United States, New York makes it very difficult for parties or candidates to get onto the ballot, the result being this abysmal selection (taken directly from the New York State Board of Elections site).

[REP] REPUBLICAN: George W. Bush
[DEM] DEMOCRATIC: John F. Kerry
[IND] INDEPENDENCE: Ralph Nader
[CON] CONSERVATIVE: George W. Bush
[WOR] WORKING FAMILIES: John F. Kerry
[PJP] PEACE AND JUSTICE: Ralph Nader
[SWP] SOCIALIST WORKERS: Roger Calero
[LBT] LIBERTARIAN: Michael Badnarik

New Yorkers can choose among only five people (all men). There are probably twice as many kinds of premium brands of butter available at each of the two food stores a block away from where I’ll be voting tomorrow!
The Democrats and the Republicans are clearly part of the problem and are both responsible for our current crisis, the Conservatives think the Republicans are too Lefty and the Libertarians would eliminate government from all regulation and welfare responsibilities.
I don’t know whether to admire or ridicule the fact that the only socialist party on the ballot has advanced a candidate who, regardless of his merits, could not Constitutionally become President of the U.S. and who in fact is not even a U.S. citizen. I do think this tells us a lot about support in the U.S. for the kind of social contract other industrial societies take for granted, even the parties on the Right.
Aside from his own heroic history of social contributions which have benefitted the entire world, Ralph Nader once again represents an almost perfect platform, and I will not condemn his campaign for accepting funds from sources to whom he could never be beholden. The money is well-spent. Nader is one of the few true democrats in American politics.
There is still the possibility of pulling the lever for Kerry on the Working Families line, but while that excellent party is worthy of the attention and support of any progressive, that is still a vote for a seriously flawed candidate. Besides, it’s totally unnecessary to keep every one of New York Electoral votes away from Bush.
Whoa, wait a minute. Where are the Greens? What does it say about our fake democracy that so important a party (okay, make that any party) is not permitted on the ballot? But I think we are still allowed a write-in candidate, so in very good conscience we could make it David Cobb, the Green Party candidate for President.
But back to the discussion of the least of many available evils, or at least a resolution of the current dilemma. Even now I can’t say for sure if I’m going to vote for Nader on the Independent Party line, Kerry on the Working families Party line or Cobb as a write-in. Wow! I guess this means that technically I could be labelled as one of those reviled “Undecideds,” even if my indecision does not relate to anything having to do with Bush or the Republicans. At least I don’t have to agonize about deciding between someone who has already demonstrated he’s a bungling idiot and someone without Bush’s extraordinary record.
Anyone but Bush? I don’t think so.
The only point I wanted to make with this post is the fact that in New York and a large number of other states voters with consciences and minds should be able to see that “anyone but Bush” could still mean that there is a choice, even on Election day itself. We don’t have to feel totally powerless when we walk into a polling place. The anti-democratic system we have to work with allows at least some of us to balk at ratifying a slate or a platform not established democraticaly.
Many of us do have some choice tomorrow, and our numbers will be recorded. We have to think ahead – now.

[image from HarpWeek]

Joe Ovelman, scattered about Chelsea

OvelmanBoneygirl.JPG

UPDATE: Barry has just set up a website for Joe and got him featured on Wooster Collective. Both developments will make his work more visible all around the world.

Joe Ovelman’s art zap.
Joe had left seven images, bills really, on boards scattered around Chelsea when he was through wheatpasting this morning. I saw only six when I went looking for them in the middle of the afternoon. I have no idea how long the rest will be dominating their busy walls, but four of those are documented here.
For still more, see Bloggy.

OvelmanBigPun.JPG
OvelmanFlotilla2.JPG
OvelmanSmilingCrobar.JPG

Critical Mass on 23rd Street

criticalmass.JPG

Okay, next time I’ll be on my own bike. The perineum probably could have managed it this time, but I hadn’t gotten the bike ready. Also, last night when at least part of an especially colorful and joyous Critical Mass flowed East on 23rd Street I was in the back of the apartment and first thought it was a political demonstration and I wondered how I had missed hearing about it (actually, after the events of the past months, it really was necessarily political). Although I raced to a front window, I was in the midst of cooking and couldn’t even get down to the street for a picture.
Actually I’m pretty happy with this one.
I love bikes, and I love bike people. It’s so simple: We belong in the streets. Some day everyone will understand that.

fascism, but it’s all-American

Bush Salute.jpg
file photograph

Fascism, it’s so US. Are there still any doubters out there?
The Bush campaign is now asking followers to swear allegiance to Bush, right hands extended. The pledge:

“I care about freedom and liberty. I care about my family. I care about my country. Because I care, I promise to work hard to re-elect, re-elect George W. Bush as president of the United States.”

The principle established, the words can easily be rearranged in the future as needed.

[image from Chemtrails]

election night gatherings

getyourwaron.gif

Sooo . . . What do you wear to a civil war anyway?”
A week ago I wrote that I would probably post a list of progressive spaces which are encouraging visitors to hang out next Tuesday evening, on the [first?] day of our federal election agony.
I ended up contributing to a list which Barry assembled and has now posted on his own site. We haven’t yet decided what we’re going to do that night ourselves. The only thing I’ve done so far in the way of preparation is to get half way through a good apartment cleaning, the remainder to be completed tomorrow. I just knew I wouldn’t feel like doing anything once the street fighting began.
Having also done tons of laundry this week, I’m now free to think about the balloon in the last box of the latest “get your war on.”

[image from “get your war on”]

Oliver Herring

Herringboy.JPG
Oliver Herring Patrick (2004)
digital C-print photographs, museum board, foam core and polystrene, 51″ x 37″ x 37″ with vitrine
Herringgirl.JPG
Oliver Herring Gloria (2004)
digital C-print photographs, museum board, foam core and polystyrene, 72″ x 40″ x 40″ with vitrine

Oliver Herring continues his fascination with play and the figure in a terrific installation at Max Protetch. There’s an amusing video which turns large earthmoving machinery into dancing Tonka toys, a wall-size installation composed of the intersecting lines of two separate photo narratives, a couple of large, luscious male portrait photographs, a topographically-described photo representsation of a languorous youth (and his snake), a limited-edition newspaper documenting the mud-wrestling performance of two brothers and, the show’s centerpiece, both figuratively and creatively, two life-size portrait sculptures sheathed in bits cut from thousands of separate photographs.
Instant personal favorites: Gloria’s beautiful hips and Patrick’s underarm hair.

something a little less personal this time

alex barry
Alex Barry I Wish I Was Sean Landers (2003-2004) ink on paper 4.25″ x 5.5″

No, really, I’m fine. In fact, the radiation side effects have nearly disappeared. I just decided I could now share this wonderful little Alex Barry drawing, one of several my partner Barry and I picked up late in June at the TAG Projects show in DUMBO.
The image and its text wouldn’t have made much sense on this site before a few weeks ago, when I first wrote about what I did on my summer vacation. I liked the drawing and its wisdom then and I like it even more now, after what we call the recent unpleasantness. I have no idea what inspired the piece. Although it almost surely references some personal experience of the artist, I think its humor will register with most people.
Unfortunately I can’t find any links to Barry’s other work, but I’m going to try to record and post the really beautiful, much larger drawing he sent to us as a gift, more or less out of the blue. We still haven’t even met him, but surely will, and we want to visit the studio where these drawings begin.

how to get a flu shot in New York

flushot.JPG
outside Chelsea Health Center, Tuesday, 7:45 am

[if you’re only interested in the logistics, go straight to the bold area within the text below]

I’m not going to go into the political, social, even moral issues surrounding the disastrous loss of half of the nation’s supply of influenza vaccine this year. I’m not going to write about what the ensuing chaos in the distribution of the remaining supply says for the competence or resolution of our local, state and federal authorities. And I won’t even allude to the implications this mess has for our ability to deal with the major terrorist biological strike those same authorities have been warning us about for at least three years.
I’m only going to describe how I got a flu shot yesterday morning, in the hopes that the story will help others to duplicate my success.
Although I’m not 65 years old, I happen to fall within at least three so-called risk groups for getting a serious case of influenza. Even before those numbers had added up, I had been innoculated every year.
This year as usual, for many weeks beginning late summer, I had trusted in the ability of my primary care doctor, a specialist in HIV disease, to secure a vaccine virtually all of his patients really depend upon each year. The office assured me several times that it was only the usual delay that was postponing my shot. I suspected otherwise, but I did not think any other source would be more reliable than my own physician. When my last call to the office, made the week before this one, produced a flat confession that they would not be getting any supples and (more shocking) that they could not direct me anywhere else, I was left totally to my own devices. By this time the possibilities were of course extremely limited, since the national panic had already begun.
I called every local governmental, institutional and private office I could think of, but every lead came up empty (most of them actually only directing me to each other). My worst experiences (for incompetence) were with the New York’s 311 operators and the recordings and individuals answering the phones at the city’s Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. One hotline person said there was nothing in my zip code area, suggested I give him another one, and when I suggested rather that he give me one, I was asked, “How about New York, New York?”
Council Member Chistine Quinn‘s office showed some real interest in my search when I called on Monday, and they had in fact already been trying, thus far without much success, to assemble practical information for those who needed it. Many reports had said that the Chelsea Health Center was giving innoculations, but no one was able to describe the circumstances. Quinn’s office promised to continue its investigation and suggested that I stop by the center, which was only five blocks from our apartment. I walked over early that afternoon where I got the information which got me back at their doorstep the next day before dawn.
It was pretty dark. I had forgotten that there even were such hours as those crowded around 6:30 am. The night doorman was still on duty, which seemed to surprise me, perhaps because I wasn’t really very much together yet, this being mathematically the middle hour of my usual sleep assignment. A few feet further down the block I smiled to the nice South Asian fruit and vegetable guy as he assembled his display on the sidewalk (he’s regularly still at his stand until early evening – his kids will probably end up at Columbia or NYU). The guy who runs the corner newstand was still assembling his display, and inside the doorway of the still locked Gristede’s across the street were big bags of fresh crusty bread, apparently at no risk of being snatched away before they were liberated by store staff.
I decided I really like dawn – and the thereafter. But there would still be that problem with getting to bed eight hours earlier, so I’m not likely to rearrange things so long as I live in Manhattan.
I got to the neatly-landscaped art deco Health Center building (west side of 9th Avenue, just below 27th Street) at 6:45. I had been advised the day before to be there by 7 am, to be among the 350 people who would be given shots that day. I was out by 10:30, having drawn number 126 when they distributed the cards which assigned the order to the people lined outside the building.
HERE IS HOW TO GO ABOUT GETTING A FLU SHOT:

Shots are available at seven clinics in the city, but I can only describe the specifics of my own experience. At the Chelsea clinic 350 shots are allocated each Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday (I don’t know how finite the total supply may be).
Access to rest rooms is available in the building, although I’m not sure at what time that first becomes possible. There is an elevator to their basement location. Bottled water is occasionally distributed to those waiting, and there is a drink vending machine inside.
I did not see any neighborhood address requirement being invoked, although it may be necessary to be a resident of New York City to receive an innoculation. Only those who are most at risk are being given shots, and some evidence of risk status is being required. That could mean a drivers license or Medicare card for proof of age 65 or above, a doctor’s certificate describing an immune suppression (including those with HIV disease), or conditions like heart disease, lung problems and asthma, diabetes, kidney disease, treatment for cancer, high doses of steroids, and sickle cell anemia. I saw some people accepted who were only able to produce (easily identified) prescription items. I did not see any babies.
Around 8 o’clock you are given a number corresponding to your position in line and you are then free to leave for a while or take shelter sitting with your very interesting neighbors inside one of the city buses parked at the curb. Shots will be distributed beginning at 8:30, at the rate of approximately 100 per hour, so you will have a good idea of when you should be back in line.
Once your number is called there is an efficient screening interview and then the vaccine is delivered in your upper arm.

ADDENDUM: If you’re looking for a neat little spot close by for a snack or a coffee, head for Lunch Basket on the north side of 24th Street, just west of 9th Avenue. Owner-crafted light food, very cozy, with a few chairs.

Remarkably, especially for those who know me well, I found the entire experience to be totally stress-free. There were no snags, no uncomfortable incidents. Most of the people I was surrounded by were older than myself, and there was certainly a strong element of crusty Lefty veterans of urban campaigns. But overall, there was an amazing diversity, camaraderie and just plain good will and caregiving (a number of people had canes, walkers, wheel chairs, folding seats of every description, and accompanying one elderly couple seen inside the building was a large oxygen tank which served the very sprightly and beautiful wife).
Everything was very orderly, with absolutely no confusion. The clinic staff was efficient, but they were also magnificently considerate, informative and charming. Everyone, patients and employees or volunteers, seemed to delight in a gentle comic humor as well.
But the fact remains, none of those people should have had to leave their homes in the night and wait outside in the cold in order to get a simple flu vaccine in the first place. We should do better, at least as well as the rest of the developed world does for its citizens, but I doubt that we ever will. It’s all about the god of the free market, a false and indifferent god, but it’s our very own.